Ahistorical view of
terrorism not applicable

This guesteditorial was published in the Raleigh, N.C. News and Observer on August
8, 1985.

Why do we Americans misunderstand
terrorism and the wor1d's swelling dislike for us and our country?

Most of us only condemn as
barbaric terrorism that is directed against us, while a few, such as E.M. Adams,
in a recent Point of View, clearly see that one person's terrorism is another's
patriotism and condemn both equally. But few of us ever question the
condemnation itself.

Professor Adams presents a point
of view enfeebled by neglect of history, a neglect that characterizes American
attitudes. He, as many American intellectuals, thinks in the realm of timeless
theory.

We, for instance, are proud of
our timeless Constitution, basically unchanged in two centuries, but we neglect
the facts that the political philosophy upon which it is based was provoked by
the concrete political conditions in l7th century England, which John Locke's
philosophizing meant to reshape, and that these conditions no longer exist,
having been replaced by others of which Locke had no inkling.

Our economists espouse a theory
that is, both timeless and hypothetical, which does not take concrete conditions
into account and treats the human suffering brought about by concrete conditions
as not economically relevant. Our philosophers have abandoned the historical
approach for abstract analysis, and even our historians have become event
oriented, abandoning universal history as not instructive.

In a word, our culture is
ahistorical. Professor Adams' condemnation of terrorism is based upon the
abstract distinction between combatants and non-combatants, the so-called
innocents. But he has ignored this distinction's historical context, which is
far different from the contemporary context, for combatants were distinguished
from non-combatants in a world of kings and princes who ruled their peoples
absolutely. Those people had no say in their governments' wars, and policies,
were illiterate, and were thus ignorant of the motives of their rulers and the
effects of policies on other peoples.

But conditions have changed.
Democracy has made all of us participants in our nations' endeavors; most of us
who are citizens of Western nations are literate; and the press has made
available to us enough information to make it possible for us to know not only
about our own but the world’s problems as well. We have lost our innocence;
there are no innocents in today‘s world.

Our ahistdricism forges
unjustified attitudes and generates countless problems. For instance, Professor
Adams' opinion and a feature headlined "Africa travels road to ruin" appeared in
the same Sunday edition, and, of course, Africa's problems were blamed on the
Africans themselves—mere socialist mismanagement! But history belies this
indictment, for 40 of Africa‘s 41 nations were once colonies of Western European
countries, and in all their years as colonies, these Western colonial powers not
only exploited their colonies economically but made almost no effort to educate
the African people, teach them scientific agricultural methods, develop their
countries, or prepare them for independence. The thought, I suppose, was that
Africa would remain colonized forever, but since World War II, colonies have
become economic burdens, and the Africans have been left to their own primitive
devices. Our brethren Western nations brought the Africans into the 20th century
saddled with second-century knowledge. Little wonder that they are not
succeeding.

But the problem is even more
pervasive. Patrick Buchanan, the president's recently appointed communications
director said, while working as a commentator for CNN, that Central America's
problems could best be so1ved by allowing capitalism to work its way there as
though socialism had been the prevailing Central American economic philosophy
since it won its independence from Spain. Can he be ignorant of the fact that
capitalism has been working its way there for most of the time since that event?

We Americans live in the present
and assume that our beliefs and attitudes are so unquestionably right that we
merely presume that other peoples want or at least should want to live exactly
as we do, so we have set out to Americanize the world, not taking into
consideration the beliefs and attitudes of different cultures.

The American people generally
approve of American policies, especially the policy of Americanization. We
always view the world from the standpoint of our interests, never asking about
the interests of the people whose lives we are affecting.

How are the weak supposed to
resist the most powerful nation on Earth? By meeting us man-to-man in battle,
combatant to combatant, under rules devised by the Western World in Geneva that
stipulate that we leave non-combatant innocents untouched? Not likely!

Terrorism is the only weapon the
weak have, and it is completely justified, for none of us is innocent
anymore.